Perhaps / by Carrie Chapman Catt.
- SCA27-WA15-5-38
- File
- [1915]
Part of Alice Riggs Hunt fonds.
File consists of one miniature pamphlet (16 p.) published by the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
Hunt, Alice Riggs
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Perhaps / by Carrie Chapman Catt.
Part of Alice Riggs Hunt fonds.
File consists of one miniature pamphlet (16 p.) published by the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
Hunt, Alice Riggs
Part of Alice Riggs Hunt fonds.
File consists of six photographs with notes by Alice Riggs Hunt. Includes a portrait of Carrie Chapman Catt, one postcard photograph of Crystal MacMillan and Jane Addams, group portraits taken at the International Women's Congress for Peace and Freedom, Zurich, 1919 (Women's International League for Peace and Freedom). Includes identifications by Alice Riggs Hunt.
Hunt, Alice Riggs
The winning policy / by Carrie Chapman Catt.
Part of Alice Riggs Hunt fonds.
File consists of one pamphlet (7 p.) on suffrage.
Hunt, Alice Riggs
Part of Alice Riggs Hunt fonds.
File consists of 33 items of correspondence between Alice Riggs Hunt and others. Correspondents include:
Hunt, Alice Riggs
Part of Alice Riggs Hunt fonds.
File consists of 11 pieces of correspondence to and from Alice Riggs Hunt concerning suffrage. Correspondents include Carrie Chapman Catt, E. Sylvia Pankhurst, Ida B. Sammis, Claire Alderson, Mary Garrett Hay.
Hunt, Alice Riggs
Broadside condemning Elizabeth Cady Stanton's "The Woman's Bible" and the fight for women's suffrage. Published in 1895, Woman's Bible discusses Stanton's views that Christianity and masculine theology were some of the leading factors in keeping women from gaining rights. Although highly criticized both before and during its publication, Woman's Bible was a bestseller and was reprinted twice in the year after its publication. The broadside here was printed approximately 25 years after the publication of Woman's Bible, likely during the time that the debate on the ratification of the 19th amendment to the US Constitution was underway.
The broadside excerpts passages from Stanton's work in an attempt to prove that fears around women's suffrage leaders are founded. The unknown author also implicates suffrage leaders Carrie Chapman Catt and Alice Stone Blackwell, even though neither had a hand in the publication of The Woman's Bible.